La Malinche (c.1505 – c.1529), known also as Malintzin and Doña Marina, was a Native American woman (almost certainly Nahua) from the Mexican Gulf Coast, who accompanied Hernán Cortés and played an active and powerful role in the Spanish conquest of Mexico, acting as interpreter, advisor and intermediary. The figure of la Malinche (also known as Malinalli, Malintzin and Doña Marina) is an important and contested icon in Mexican history and cultural expressions. Created by Patricia Arriaga-Jordán. Other articles where La Malinche is discussed: Manuel Vilar: …Aztecs; and La Malinche (1852; La Malinche or Doña Marina), the first native woman of Mexico who converted to Christianity and who also served as Hernán Cortés’s translator. Malinalli Tenépatl, nació entre los años 1496 y 1501, en Coatzacoalcos, Veracruz.Hija de una familia indígena de clase alta de un pueblo llamado Painala.Cuando era niña fue cedida por sus padres a un cacique del estado de Tabasco, tras un enfrentamiento que su familia perdió, y siguiendo la costumbre de ese momento, tuvieron que ceder a la niña al ganador. Who was this slave princess who helped bring down the mightiest civilization Mesoamerica had ever … La Malinche mountain, also known as Matlalcueye or Malintzin, is an active volcano (dormant for the last 3,100 years) located in Tlaxcala and Puebla states, in Mexico.Officially, its summit reaches 4,461 metres (14,636 ft) above sea level, though it is generally considered to be closer to 4,440 metres (14,567 ft), using GPS measurements. She was destined for everlasting fame (or infamy, as some prefer) as Doña Marina, or "Malinche," the woman who helped conquistador Hernan Cortes topple the Aztec Empire. Biografía de la Malinche. A young native princess named Malinali from the town of Painala was sold into slavery sometime between 1500 and 1518.
With Alberto Barahona, Daniel Villar, Frida Tavera, Luis Arrieta.
The story of Marina, Malintzin or Malinche - as she came to be known - …